14. October 2021 - 16. January 2022

LOUISE STOMPS – FIGURING NATURE

Sculptures and Drawings 1928-1988

A first retrospective for Berlin sculptor Louise Stomps 
DAS VERBORGENE MUSEUM hosted by the Berlinische Galerie

From 15 October 2021 until 17 January 2022, DAS VERBORGENE MUSEUM will be the guest of the Berlinische Galerie for the first retrospective devoted to the sculptor Louise Stomps. With about 90 sculptures on show, this exhibition will grant insights into the life’s work of this exceptional artist.
The sculptor Louise Stomps (1900 – 1988) was moved all her life to lend creative expression to human suffering and defenceless animals. They were key themes in her work, spanning a career from the end of the 1920s until the late 1980s.

Her sculpture evolved over the course of these five decades away from the classical figure to abstract figuration as the artist gradually developed her significant personal style.

Stomps had drawn and sculpted prolifically since 1918, but it was only ten years later, after divorcing her husband, that the mother of two daughters devoted herself full-time to her art. She refused to be disheartened by the widespread prejudice that women were more suited to the decorative arts, attending evening classes in nude drawing at the United State Schools of Free and Applied Arts in Berlin from 1928 until 1932; she also took lessons from Milly Steger (1881 – 1948), who gave a sculpture class at the Berlin Association of Women Artists.

Few of her works dating from the 1930s survived, as her studio was hit in an air raid during the Second World War. One is “The Couple”, carved in oak (1937), which shows the deep bond between two lovers kneeling side by side. It still displays a realistic approach to human depictions. These early experiments with a personal style did not, however, conform to the dominant view of art under National Socialism, and as a consequence the artist withdrew into the seclusion of inner emigration.

In October 1945, soon after the Nazi were defeated, Louise Stomps joined Renée Sintenis, Hans Uhlmann, Gustav Seitz, Paul Dierkes, Karl Hartung and others to show at the first exhibition of “Sculpture and Sculptors’ Drawings” at the Gerd Rosen Gallery in Berlin at Kurfürstendamm 215.

After the convulsions of the Second World War, which she had experienced first-hand, it seemed to Louise Stomps, as it did to many of her colleagues at the time, that the only way forward for art lay in figural abstraction. From the 1950s, the postures adopted by her figures often suggest a threat, a rejection or a fear. Examples are “Grief” (1951), “Outsider” (1947), “Shared Lament” (1948) and, in a direct reference to political events, “Hiroshima” (1960).

Wood was Stomps’s material of choice for her FIGURING NATURE, no doubt prompted by a radical change in her life when, in 1960, she moved from Berlin to the Bavarian village of Rechtmehring, near Wasserburg in the valley of the River Inn, where she made her home in an old sawmill dating from the 15th century. There she drew her inspiration from nature as the source of all life, from the wood of the beech, pine, common and local oak, apple, acacia, walnut, pear and many other varieties of tree. Now she focused on developing her own formal idiom, which has been identified with figural abstraction.

In the 1960s, she began work on tall, slender figures three metres high, such as “Ascetic” (1963) and “Pilgrim” (1966). “Gilgamesh”, made in 1980 and measuring 3.20 metres, was a legendary hero one-third human and two-thirds god who set out in quest of immortality.

 

 

Biography


PREVIEW 2020-2021

 

DAS VERBORGENE MUSEUM
will be the guest of the Berlinische Galerie

15 October 2021 until 17 January 2022

OPENING
Thursday | 14 October | 7 pm

7 – 8 pm
with opening speakers

Please confirm attendance by 8.10.21 at
berlinischegalerie.de/registration-opening-stomps

SPEAKERS
Dr. Thomas Köhler
Director Berlinische Galerie

Dr. Klaus Lederer
Senator for Culture and Europe

Elisabeth Moortgat
Board of Directors Das Verborgene Museum

8 – 10 pm
No registration needed

LOCATION 
Berlinische Galerie
Alte Jakobstraße 124 –128
10969 Berlin

Please check the latest
hygiene rules on website:
bg.berlin/hygiene-rules

 

OPENING TIMES
Wed – Mon 10 am – 6 pm
Closed on Tuesdays

 

DUARTION
15 October 2021 until 17 January 2022

 
CATALOGUE

on the life and work of the sculptor Louise Stomps

LOUISE STOMPS FIGURING NATURE
Sculptures and Drawings 1928-1988

Edited by Marion Beckers and Elisabeth Moortgat for DAS VERBORGENE MUSEUM with academic essays by Yvette Deseyve, Arie Hartog, Annelie Lütgens, Christiane Meister, Christina Thürmer-Rohr and Julia Wallner and personal memories by Berthold Kogut, Martin Meggle, Peter Schrader and Hans Goswin Stomps; illustrated with new reproductions of the works; Hirmer-Verlag, German/English, 224 pages,180 colour illustrations, in the museum € 29, hardback.
ISBN 978 97774 3776 7

ADDRESS

The association
DAS VERBORGENE MUSEUM

has ceased its activities since January 1, 2022.
Since then, the rooms in Berlin Charlottenburg at Schlüterstraße 70 have also been closed.

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